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-
- Guidelines to Working Group Chair(s)
-
- Formation
- ---------
-
- IETF working groups are the primary mechanism for the development of
- IETF protocols, standards, and recommendations.
-
- Before any working group is created, some preliminary work must be
- done. First, anyone interested in creating an IETF working group must
- consult with the appropriate IETF Area Director under whose direction
- the working group would fall, to confirm that creating a working group
- is appropriate.
-
- When determining if creating a working group is appropriate, the Area
- Director will consider several issues:
-
- o Does the working group's activities overlap with those of another
- working group? If so, it may still be appropriate to create
- another working group, but this question must be considered
- carefully. Subdividing efforts often dilutes the available
- technical expertise.
-
- o Are there several people clearly interested in the working group's
- topic and willing to expend the effort to produce a result (such as
- an RFC)? There are situations where, while the problem the working
- group would tackle is interesting, there are not motivated bodies
- to make a working group effective. Working groups require
- considerable manpower: a chairman is needed to run meetings, an
- editor to edit authors' submissions, and authors to actually write
- text. IETF experience suggests that these roles typically cannot
- all be handled by one person, four or five active members are
- typically required. If the necessary manpower is lacking, the
- person interested in creating the working group might consider
- actually writing the RFC alone (an activity which usually is
- feasible), and then submitting it to the IETF for review, rather
- than creating a working group.
-
- o Are the issues that the working group plans to address important?
- Usually, if the issues are not important, then the necessary
- manpower will not exist, but the question is worth considering
- separately.
-
- The Area Director, considering the above criterion will decide whether
- to pursue the formation of the group through the chartering process.
-
-
- The Charter
- -----------
-
- The formation of a working group requires an approved, written
- charter. This work statement should in about one page explain the
- general purpose of the group, delimit its technical scope, enumerate a
- set of goals and milestones together with timeframes for their
- completion, and document various administrative points.
-
- The content of the charter document is negotiated between a
- prospective working group chair and the relevant area director. When
- both the prospective working group chair and the area director are
- satisifed with the charter text, it can become the basis for forming a
- working group. The charter document may be similarly renegotiated at
- any time during the course of the working group's effort to reflect
- the changing goals of the group.
-
- Each charter consists of 5 sections. These sections include both
- static information about the group, the name, the chairmen, the
- mailing lists, and the description. The goals and milestones are part
- of the IETF tracking system, and are designed to allow a degree of
- project management and support. They change periodically to reflect
- the current status of the group.
-
- o Name: A working group name should be reasonable descriptive.
- Additionally the group needs to find an 8 character ASCII acronym
- to reference the group in the IETF directories, mailing lists, and
- general documents.
-
- o Chair(s): The working group may have one or two chair(s) to
- perform the administrative functions of the group. It is strongly
- suggested that these persons have internet mail addresses.
-
- o Mailing Lists: Most of the work of an IETF working group is
- conducted on Internet Mail exploder lists. It is required that an
- IETF working group have a general discussion list. A person needs
- to be designated the list service postmaster, usually through the
- list-request alias. An archive should be maintained in a publicly
- FTPable place. The IETF-archive@cnri.reston.va.us should be added
- to the mailing list.
-
- It is strongly recommended that the mailing list be on an
- connected IP host, to facilitate use of the SMTP expansion
- command (EXPN) and to allow FTPaccess to the mail archives. If
- this is not possible, the archive and membership of the list must be
- made available by querying the list-request alias.
-
- o Description: In 1-2 paragraphs, the focus and intent of the group
- should be set forth. By reading this section alone, a person
- should be able to decide whether this group is relevant to their
- work.
-
- Recognising the importance of security and network management in the
- Internet Architecture, this description of the work of the group must
- specifically address the impact in terms of security and management.
-
- o Goals and Milestones: The working group should after the first
- meeting be able to enumerate a timetable for work. While this
- often will change, it is indispensable to potential participants to
- be able to identify the critical moments for input. This milestone
- list should be updated periodically to reflect progress. Updated
- milestones should be submitted along with meeting minutes.
-
- Goals should be trackable items. It is strongly recommended that
- each document the Working Group intends to produce be listed both
- with a date the first draft is expected to be installed as an
- Internet Draft, and the date the Working Group intends to send
- the document to the IESG.
-
-
- Announcement of the Group
- -------------------------
-
- After a charter is written, it should be submitted to Greg Vaudreuil
- <gvaudre@ri.reston.va.us> for recording. He will enter the chartering
- information into the IETF tracking database and send the charter to
- the IESG-TECH mailing list for approval and comment. Upon approval of
- the charter, the Vaudreuil will send the charter to the IETF mailing list.
-
- Duties of the Working Group Chair(s)
- ------------------------------------
-
- The working group chair(s) have wide discretion in the conduct of
- business. The working group chair(s) have the responsibility to call
- meetings of the working group, to make reports of the working group
- activity available for public distribution, and otherwise advance the
- group toward completion of the goals of the group as listed in the
- charter.
-
- Scheduling of Meetings
- ----------------------
-
- The working group is expected to meet periodically to discuss and direct
- future progress. It is expected, but not required that every working
- group meet at the trimester IETF plenary sessions. Additionally,
- interim meetings are encouraged by telephone conference, video
- teleconference, or by actual face to face meetings. Meetings should be
- publicized as widely as possible, by announcing their time and location
- on the working group mailing list, the IETF mailing list, and by putting
- the date on the IETF Calendar by notifying Megan Davies
- <mdavies@cnri.reston.va.us>.
-
- Meeting Policy
- --------------
-
- All working group actions should be public, and wide participation
- should be encouraged. An announcement of the date and time must be
- sent to the working group mailing list and to Megan Davies
- <mdavies@cnri.reston.va.us> a reasonable time before the meeting.
-
- After a period of open meetings, the working group chair may hold
- executive (closed) meetings of the working group consisting of the
- authors of a particular document and any serious reviewers. This is
- often necessary to make forward progress preparing a final document.
- All work conducted in executive session must be made available for
- review by any interested party.
-
- Preparation of Minutes
- ----------------------
-
- All working group sessions should be reported by making minutes
- available. It is expected that the working group chair(s) (or a
- person designated by the working group chairman) submit minutes in
- ASCII text to Megan Davies <mdavies@cnri.reston.va.us> after each
- meeting for publication in the IETF Proceedings, and for posting in
- the IETF Directories.
-
- These minutes should include the agenda for the meeting, an account of
- the discussion including any decisions made, and a list of attendees.
-
- Document Authorship
- -------------------
-
- The work of an IETF working group usually results in the publication of
- one or more RFC's. This series of documents are the journal of record
- for the internet community. A document can be written by an individual
- in the working group or by the group as a whole with a designated
- editor. The designated author need not be the group chair(s).
-
-
- Internet Drafts
- ---------------
-
- The Internet Drafts directories are provided to the working groups as
- a resource to post and disseminate early copies of any and all
- documents of the working group. This common repository is available
- to all interested persons to facilitate wide review and comment. It
- is encouraged that draft documents be posted as soon as they become
- reasonably stable. Posting after they are in their final form reduces
- the utility of this resource. See the ``Guidelines to Authors of
- Internet-Drafts'' for a more complete description and some basic
- guidelines.
-
- Termination of a Working Group
- ------------------------------
-
- Working groups are typically chartered to accomplish a specific task.
- After that task is complete, the group will be disbanded. If after a
- meeting a few times, it becomes evident that the group is unable to
- complete the work outlined in the charter, the group with it's area
- director can either 1) recharter to refocus on a smaller task, 2)
- choose new chair(s), or 3) disband.
-
- In those situations where the working group chairperson and the area
- director disagree about the steps required to refocus the group or the
- need to disband the group, the IESG will make a determination with
- input from the area director and the working group chair(s)
-
-
-
- Sample Charter
-
- Internet Thumb Twiddling Protocol Working Group (ittp)
-
- Chair(s):
-
- Jolly Goodtimer/ABC Jolly_G@abc.washington.dc.us
-
- Mailing Lists:
- General Discussion: ittp@abc.washington.dc.us
- To Subscribe: ittp-request@abc.washington.dc.us
- Mail Archive: pub/ittp-archive@abc.washington.dc.us
-
- Description of Working Group:
-
- The Internet Thumb Twiddling working group is chartered to
- define a protocol for remotely twiddling thumbs over the
- Internet. In defining this protocol, several questions must be
- addressed. The use of remote or virtual thumbs must be more
- clearly defined. The widespread usage of this protocol may
- generate large amounts of traffic, and the impact of such
- traffic needs to be analyze. As with all modern protocols,
- provisions also must be made for the remote management of the
- protocol, as well as of the thumbs, and for authenticated
- twiddling. Other security issues will be considered, but do
- not seem a priority at this time. However, there might be a
- need to limit participant embarrassment at being a thumb
- twiddler, so that additional mechanisms will be needed to
- prevent disclosure.
-
- Goals and Milestones:
-
- May 1999 First IETF Meeting: review and approve the charter
- making any changes deemed necessary. Examine the
- particular functional needs for a TT protocol and define
- the scope of the service. Begin work on a framework for
- the solution, if non-trivial. Assign writing assignments
- for first draft of document. First draft to be
- completed.
-
- Sep 1999 Review first draft document, determine necessary
- revisions. Follow up discussion will occur on mailing
- list.
-
- Dec 1999 Make document an Internet Draft. Continue revisions
- based on comments received at meeting and over e-mail.
-
- Mar 2000 Fourth IETF meeting. Review final draft and if OK, give
- to IESG for publication as RFC. Begin implementations.
-
-